Yoshimoto T, Tobiishi M, Tsuru D
J Biochem. 1976 Oct;80(4):703-9. doi: 10.1093/oxfordjournals.jbchem.a131329.
Lysozyme [EC 3.2.1.17] was purified from human tears, serum, and urine of acute monocytic leukemia patients, renal disease patients, and residents in cadmium-polluted areas of Tsushima Island using an affinity adsorbent containing lysozyme-lysate of Micrococcus lysodeikticus cell walls as the ligand. By means of this procedure, leukemia lysozyme was purified 100- to 200-fold with an activity recovery of 80%. It was crystallized at pH 10. This purified preparation appeared homogeneous in disc electrophoresis and showed a specific activity 2.5-fold higher than that of crystalline lysozyme from hen egg-white. Tear lysozyme was also purified to a nearly homogeneous state while the enzymes from normal serum and urine of a nephrosis patient and of residents in cadmium-polluted area were still disc electrophoretically heterogeneous and showed low specific activity as compared with purified leukemia lysozyme.